THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY,Y,1934 'HE MICHIGAN DAILY -,I "">.- rI memrneme noe- a .,.- - ~. Puonshed every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Contrdl of Student Publications. IdMember of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. $soiat, Ollgite 'Prss - 1933 NATIOAL cOERAGI 1934 --- -T13MBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is enclusively entitled to the use f=r republication of all news dispathces credited to it or not otherwise credited in thii paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the )'1ost Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postag ,granted by Third Aistant Postmaster-General. Subsription during: summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regutar school dear by carrier, $.75; by mail, $4.25. Oces: tudent PubiicatiOiS Building, Maynard Street " .nn A'-bor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives College Publications Representatives, Inc., 4C' East Thirty-fourth Street, New York City; .80 Boylson Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue. Chicago. ,. Chicago.EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR,. .. ......WILLIAM G. FERRIS CITYEDITORG................JOHN HEALEY EDITORIAL DIRECTOR ...........RALPH G. COULTER SPORTS EDITOR...............ARTHURACARSTENS WOMEN'S EDITOR..................ELEANOR BLUM NIGHT EDITORS: PaulJ. Elliott, John J. Flaherty, Thomas A. Groehn, Thomas H. Keene, David G. MacDonald John M. O'Connell, Robert S. Ruwitch, Arthur M. Taub. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Western, Joel Newman, Kenneth Parker, William Reed, Arthur Settle. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy Gies, Florence Harper, Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Josephine McLean, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider, Marie Murphy. REPORTERS: Donald K. Anderson, John H. Batdorff, Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Robert E. Deisley, Allan Dewey, John A. Doelle, Sheldon M. Ellis, Sidney Finger, William H. Fleming, Robert J. Freehling, Sherwin Gaines, RalphW. Hurd, Walter R. Krueger, John N. Merchant, Fred W. Neal, Kenneth Norman, Melvin C Oathout, John P. Otte, Lloyd S. Reich, Marshall Shulman, Bernard Weissman, Joseph Yager, C. Bradford Carpenter, Jacob C. Siedel, Bernard Levick, George Andros. ?red Buesser, Robert Cummins, Fred DeLano, Robert J. Fried- man, Raymond Goodman, Morton Mann. Dorothy Briscoe, Maryana Chockly, Florence Davies, Helen Diefendorf, Marian Donaldson, Saxon Finch, Elaine Goldberg, Betty Goldstein, live Griffith, Harriet Hath- a y MarionHolden, Beulah Kanter, Lois King, Selma Levin, Elizabeth Miller, Melba Morrison, Mary Annabel Neal, Ann Neracher, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Rueger, Dor- othy Shappel, Carolyn Sherman, Molly Solomon, Dor- othy Vale, Betty Vinton, Laura Winograd, Jewel Wuerfel. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER...........W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER ...........BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.. . ......... .............................. CATHARINE M HENY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Noel Tur- ner; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circula. tion and Contracts, Jack Efroymson. ASSISTANTS: Milton Kramer, JohnOgden, Bernard Ros- enthal, Joe Rothbard, George Atherton. Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Virginia Cluff, Patricia Daly, Genevieve Field, Louise Florez, Doris-Gimmy, Betty Greve, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Louise Krause, Barbara Morgan, Margaret Mustard, Betty Simonds. fRESHMAN TRYOUTS: Willam Jackson, Louis Gold- smith, David Schiffer, William Barndt, Jack Richardson, Charles Parker, Robert Owen, Ted Wohlgemuth, Jerome Grossman, Avnr, Kronenberger, Jim Horiskey, Tom Clarke, Scott, Samuel Beckman, Homer Lathrop, Hall, Ross Levin, Willy Tomlinson, Dean Asselin, Lyman Bittman, John Park, Don Hutton, Allen Upson, Richard Hardenbrook, Gordon Cohn NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN J. FLAHERTY Arms Embargo Bill As A Peace Move... . W ITH THE SIGNING of the arms em- If V bargo bill by President Roosevelt, two important considerations are brought to light. In the first place, the President's action will prob- ably bring the war in the Chaco to a speedy close,' for it is generally agreed among experts that neither Bolivia nor Paraguay has the equipment to carry on a major war without help from outside powers., However, a more important consideration as far as the people of this country are concerned is that the President did not wait for the other countries of the world to take action. These powers are scheduled to meet today at Geneva and will un- doubtedly be influenced in their final decision by the embargo Whichthe United States has placed on the sale of arms and ammunition to the warring countries. President Roosevelt's action in not wait- ing for the rest of the world powers is probably not a gesture of unfriendliness toward the League of Nations. On the contrary, it may be regarded as a courageous step, taken at a time when there was need for immediate action. A further aspect of the situation tends to sub- stantiate the idea that the President's action was not unfriendly toward the League. President Roose-- velt has asked that Congress give him the right to impose embargoes on the sale of armsto warring nations as he sees fit. That is, he will decide which country is the aggressor and place the embargo on sale of arms to that country alone. This would give him an opportunity to follow the decisions of the League, which usually determines which of two countries at war is the aggressor. President Roosevelt's action is a definite step in the direction of peace. It is to be hoped that the other nations of the world will follow his example. Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be con- strued as expressing the editorial opinion of The. nalr 1A-. ... rnmmi i. , R i. hA d1, AVaOrd But as is so often the case in our peculiar social order, the man who got the money wasn't the one to give me value for it. The real teachers in this remarkable course were many, many workers and union sympathizers and some soldiers, not to men- tion a few policemen with whom I had a midnight seminar on social problems. My main aims in taking this course were: (1.) To determine how capital treated labor in a high-pressure situation. (2.) To determine how labor treated capital under a similar situation. (3.) To see at first hand how "law and order" are maintained under these conditions. (4.) To come into living contact with a "mob" of the downtrodden mhasses and to catch, if even for a brief moment, its attitudes and psychology. My teachers must have been well trained, for the aims were well fulfilled. What I learned was: (1.) That capital in order to safeguard its in- terests uses the violence of the state ruthlessly. There were numerous policemen and soldiers, fully armed, protecting the private property and profit of a few men. Blood had flown freely - even that of women and little children. (2.) That labor returns violence for violence - but there are no police or soldiers to protect their interests. They are the mass and it is neither for property nor profit in the main that they hurl stones and insults-it is for life itself, a chance to earn and to live a bit better than the beasts of the field. (3.) That the State Militia, called to preserve "law and order," was actually and dangerously fer- menting unlawfulness and disorder. Their contin- ued presence in this working class section, with their armament of war, is creating a highly satur- ated delinquency area. Hundreds of "trouble- makers" and young delinquents were capitalizing the situation. However, as unfortunate as this is, it will continue to go from bad to worse until the troops are withdrawn. The plant is closed now and it need fear no further destruction of property. Martial law and violence on the scale it is being used there will have but the one effect of calling forth violence and vindictiveness from the other side. The present policy will lead only to further bloodshed and fury. (4.) That these mob situations are impercep- tibly leading to fascism or civil war. That as long as the masses are downtrodden, rebellion shall be That the very foundations of this democratic Re- public shall be torn out if the underlying economic and social causes which call these mobs into being are not speedily solved. (5.) That as a Christian Socialist and one who loves his country and believes in its ultimatenworth, I must dedicate myself more fully to the task of building a more just social order, and this must be, done at once lest my country and its highest ideal- ism and aspirations are lost. Would that more of you, my fellow students,, should take a course in life - as it really is for the1 masses. May I recommend it? -Gordon B. Halstead. GUYS IN THE DOLL SHOW To the Editor: Looking forward to the production of next year's Junior Girls' Play, we have an improvement to suggest. We propose the participation of men in the heretofore all-feminine opus, not only in the production phase where they have always beenj prominent, but also in the cast. Anyone who saw the. last J.G.P. could not help but recognize that it could have been immeasurably improved by substituting male actors for the women who performed the supposedly hard-boiled parts in such an effeminate manner. The 1934 J.G.P. reached the heights of technical perfection in an amateur production. The script was good, the staging was good, and the acting, in so far as the actors were adapted to their parts, was excellent. However, when they deserted their own sphere and attempted to portray hard-boiled producers and cruel gangsters, they encountered difficulties.' Would it not have been better to substitute real men in the male parts and to make for added realism even at the expense of tradition. The im- provement in- the acting and the added interest throughout the campus would doubtless make for larger box-office receipts, and for greater success in the eyes of the students as a whole. There would be difficulties, of course, concerning the management of the project, but they could be solved by forming a joint committee, which move might make for more co-operation all the way round in campus affairs. It seems to be a question of tradition versus practicability and technical excellence. It will be interesting to see whether campus opinion will cause a worn-out tradition to stand in the way of further advancement in next year's J.G.P. -A Sophomore. DISCRIMINATION AGAINST NEGRO STUDENTS To the Editor: That discrimination against Negro students on the Michigan campus exists may have been sur- prising and disconcerting news to the average stu- dent. It is not surprising to anyone who has taken the trouble to investigate the situation. The essen- tally cruel and unfair treatment given Willis Ward in return for his great work on Michigan's football and track teams is but a sample of what the average Negro student faces daily. A clear-cut example of discrimination occurred in connection with the Military Ball. On the after- noon of April 25, two days before the ball, two Negro students attempted to purchase tickets for the affair at the main desk of the Michigan Union where these tickets were officially on sale. The writer of this article had called the Union desk a few moments before and had been assured there were still "plenty of tickets left for general sale." The Negro students were refused tickets imme- diately afterwards on the ground that none were available, that all the tickets had been sold. There were three white students who will testify as eye- and ear-witnesses to these facts. NEW RECORDINGS - In Review HE Victor company has two recordings this month which should be of great interest to local music lovers and record collectors. The two releases are Verklarte Nacht, Schonberg; and Rapsodie Es- pagnole, Ravel. The first recording is one by the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra with Eugene Ormandy conducting and is a transcription for string orchestra instead of a sextette, the original version. In this recording Mr. Ormandy gives fur- ther proof, if proof be needed, that his orchestra must be considered as an organization of first rank. He has given a careful and kindly interpretation to this musical tale of two lovers. From the most quiet, tranquil and almost idyllic moods to the highest pitches of frenzied passion, Mr. Ormandy has adequately reproduced Schonberg's musical picture so that it leaves a complete satisfaction to the listener. The Victor company and Mr. Ormandy may be justly proud of this recording. It is in eight parts on four Victor records. The second is a new recording of Ravel's "Rap- sodie Espagnole." This is in four parts and features Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra. This recording is a remarkable improve- ment over the old recording in that it is excep- tionally clear, passages featuring the softer wood- wind instruments are brought out and a balance sustained throughout that makes this a musical experience well worth listening to. Mr. Stokowski has long been known as one of the most faithful interpreters of good music and this is a good example of his marvellous ability. In Feria, the fourth section of this work, he has especially cap- tured the festive spirit and the gayety that abounds. The Prelude a la Nuit is well balanced and the delicate shadings so necessary to this sec- tion are carefully observed and brought out. -Sally Place. The The %a tr e "THE SHINING HOUR" HAS ITS UNUSUAL TOUCHES WE HAVE WAITED for years for a good melo- drama in which polite convention is not of- fered a sop to the detriment of the action - in which the amenities of Mrs. Grundy are junked in favor of convincing reality. It would seem that this is the case in "The Shining Hour" of Keith Winter, whioh openstonight as the Dramatic Sea- son's fifth presentation. There is, we understand, nothing sensational about it, in the sense of lurid scandal put together for the sake of the box-office; the play is, according to its notices, sound drama, and good to look upon. "It tells an exotic love story that nearly ends in unhappiness and tragedy," says Percy Hammond, writing in the New York Herald-Tribune. "Mr. Winter has a brilliant gift of writing simple, every- day speech in a way that is both natural and hap- pily theatrical. The characters of "The Shining Hour" live in an Elizabethan farmhouse in York- shire. They meet in the ordinary relationship of family life, and in a few highly extraordinary ones. They talk of houses and horses and dogs and stables and food and love, realistically always, but to just the length and speed and sound that the stage can absorb." r This play will feature Rollo Peters, Selena Royle, Audrey Ridgewell, and Frances Compton. It will be the last play to be reviewed in The Daily before the newspaper suspends publication; the remaining two plays will be criticized in the early issues of The Summer Daily. Colleglate Observer By BUD BERNARD A professor at the University of Pittsburgh was trying to teach his Latin class how to read Roman numerals, so he wrote "LXXX" on the board and asked one of the freshman co-eds to tell him what it meant. "Love and kisses," she sighed deeply. A student at the University of Rochester, after 'spending an hour of mental anguish over a com- pound interest problem, gave up the struggle and wrote, "The bank failed. Nobody gets any interest." -* * * * A squib coming from the University of Dela- ware: IRONY '37 - Wishes he knew women like a senior. '36 - Wishes he kept track of all the women he had dated. '35 - Wishes to gosh the women wouldn't hang around him so much. '34 -- Wishes he knew what he is going to do with the ONE he's acquired after three years of wishing for it. * * * *' A group of men students at the University of Washington which just returned from a course of study at the University of Edinburgh states that the "girls not only have to pay their own carfare when you take them home from a dance, but they always pay for their own tickets when you take them to a show." Gentle hint? on this "liberal" campus for a long time. Those who cry shame at the Hitler government for its persecution of Jews should spend a part of their spare time investigating the vicious Negro dis- crimination that prevails on both sides of the Mason-Dixon line. This is the first of several articles that will be given the Daily for publication in this column in the near future. Definite cases of other types of Ia Musical Events WAHR'S BOOKSTORES NOR It 1934 Ensian Distribution contin- ues at the Student.Publications Building at 420 Maynard Street. 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